Complete burning products are water and carbon dioxide.
In a typical hydrocarbon flame, assuming complete combustion, the products are carbon dioxide and water vapor. Aside from that, what is produced depends on what is burning.
Carbon Dioxide or ashes
fuel
Carbon dioxide and water.
Carbon dioxide
Natural gas, gasoline, fuel oil, coal, and LPG burning are all chemical reactions ( chemical changes ). The reactants ( fuel and oxygen ) react yielding primarily CO2 and H2O., which are different chemical species than the reactants.
Yes, because new substances are produced in this reaction, it is an example of chemical change.
water
It depends on whats burning, but I would say Carbon Dioxide... Please correct me if wrong
It really depends on a number of factors, such as oxygen abundance and type of fuel you're talking about. But the products are mainly Carbon dioxide, Water, nitrogen oxides, Sulfur oxides, and occasionally, Ozone molecules are produced.
fuel
carbon dioxide, CO2
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide and water.
Carbon dioxide
When a fuel burns, it undergoes a combustion reaction. Combustion has two main products. These products are water and carbon dioxide.
burns, detonates, oxidizes, etc.
carbon dioxide
This actually depends on the type of fuel, but often, water vapor, pollutants and energy.